Many people have the Korean Flag on their uniforms without knowing that it has a more meaningful background than most common flags.
Summary
The meaning of Korean National Flag
is very philosophical. The origin comes from the Oriental philosophy called
Eum-Yang, in Chinese pronunciation Yin-Yang. In
The flag consists of three parts:
The white background, the red and blue circle in the center and four trigrams,
one in each corner of the flag.
The white background of the flag
means peace.
The red and blue circle in the
center is called 'Taeguk', the origin of all things in the universe. The
central thought is perfect harmony and balance: A continuous movement within
the sphere of infinity, resulting in one unit. The blue part of 'Taeguk' is
called 'Eum' and represents all negative aspects of the balance that is typical
for the symbol. The red part is called 'Yang' and describes all positive aspects.
The four trigrams at the corners
(called 'Kwe' in Korean) also represent the concept of opposites and balance.
The trigrams are heaven (upper-left) and at the other corner earth, water
(upper-right) and at the other corner fire. Looking at symbols of the trigrams,
you can see that they are opposites as well. Three unbroken bars (heaven) vs.
three broken bars (earth), etc.
For the Korean people their flag of
T'aeGuk-Ki is a source of pride and inspiration. During the Japanese occupation
period beginning in 1910 the Korean flag was outlawed in public places and for
about thirty five years the T'aeGuk flags were kept hidden until Liberation Day
in1945. The Korean flag has been a symbol of this country's struggle for
independence and freedom.
Origin
The oldest 'Yin/Yang'-symbol, which was
described in stone, was found in